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Match FAQ
The Four Rules of Gun Safety- they apply all the time,
everywhere: NPCCC's
matches are open to the public.
Spectators are welcome and there is no charge to observe.
Specific Match Disciplines: The Safe
Area is the yellow table just west of the Bay Three (largest)
canopy and adjacent to the rifle bay berm. On match days, this is the only
place on the property anyone may handle a firearm, except for under the
specific and direct command of a range officer at a specified firing
line. This is part of what is meant by having a "cold range."
The other part is that no gun is loaded at any time except under
the specific instruction of a Range Officer. The First Aid
Kit is kept at the west wall of Bay Two, right underneath the big
red cross. What you need
to have: The Range Master is the club official who is in charge of all of the property and everyone on it, including all range officers, competitors, firearms, ammunition, props and club property. All decisions on safety and procedures are made by the Range Master. The Match Director is the official in charge of the design and execution of the match, including scoring and interpretations of match rules. Often the Range Master and Match Director duties are performed by the same person. Range (or Safety) Officers are the officials of a match, like referees or umpires, but there is more to the job than just running the timer and calling the scores. They are the people who directly supervise the shooters, guns, and all shooting activity and are responsible for the safety of everyone present in a stage. During the course of a match, no one, and there are no exceptions to this, may handle a firearm on the property without an express command from the supervising Range Officer or unless they are at the yellow Safe Area table. Scorekeepers are the assistants to the Range Officers and handle the papers, shooting order, recording of scores, and help with backup observation of the shooter. Squads are the method by which competitors are arranged into groups so as to allow an orderly progression through a match. Squads are formed more or less informally after signup and the mandantory shooter's meeting prior to the start of the competition. Squads stay together throughout the match and are a way of keeping the pacing organized. Your squad will shoot the numbered stages in the order that you start. If you start on stage two, in bay two, your next stage will be in bay three, then four, and finish in bay one. There will be no jumping ahead of other squads. This way everyone should start and finish around the same time. Tear-down: When you finish your last stage your Range Officer will check with the Range Master to see if the stage can be taken down and all the props put away. Please don't leave until your stage is done. Setting up and taking down match stages is a lot of work and all clubs depend on the help of the competitors and volunteers to get it done. Please be considerate of your fellow attendees and pitch in whenever you can to make it go easier and faster for all. Pasting and
resetting:
When it is not your turn to shoot you should be helping by picking up brass,
resetting reactive targets, or pasting the cardboard targets (putting
the patches on the scored targets that cover bullet holes).
Weather:
We will shoot in inclement weather, too, if it is safe to do so, so
bring rain gear. Normally, as long as the footing is sound and
safe for the particular event (and it varies with discipline), and the
temperature is at all within the bounds of reason, we will carry on. We are always
happy to help new competitors understand the ins and outs of competing
in our matches. Be sure to ask an official or veteran competitor
if you have any kind of uncertainty at all. NPCCC does not discriminate against anyone regardless of race, gender, creed, color, or origin.
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